New Social Venture Revolutionizes Garbage Industry In India

Waste Ventures, a new part not-for profit enterprise is changing the way waste is collected and reused across the world, starting in India.

Waste pickers, who collect trash in cities like Osmanabad, India, earn barely $1 a day. The work is dangerous, with the average life expectancy to be 45 years old. In urban India alone, 40 million tons of trash are generated each year. That’s the weight of two Empire State Buildings each week. Parag Gupta, founder of Waste Ventures, has a new plan to not only empower waste collectors, but also to create sustainable revenue and improved waste collection, reduction, and recycling.

Waste Ventures will tackle the problem via three strategies:

Build: Support and provide financing for sustainable waste picker corporations, using market capital in lieu of government contracts. It also supports social organizations that work with waste pickers (providing them with a smart blueprint for the business model), and establishes connections to enable carbon credits, taking a small percentage of interest in the organization.

Disseminate: Working with other organizations and environmentally friendly enterprises to provide a space for information on how to best reduce and reuse waste.

Foster: Working with the government to ensure that legislation and regulations do not hamper waste reduction programs.